| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
,
,
DANIEL ROTTEN
,
,
DONALD R. KORITNIK
,¶ and
ROBERT B. JAFFE||
Reproductive Endocrinology Center, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California 94143
These studies were performed to assess the concentrations of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHAS) in the rhesus monkey fetal circulation from midgestation through the neonatal period, to determine the relation between changes in fetal adrenal size and DHAS levels both during gestation and after surgical stress, and to explore possible relations between changes in the concentration of DHAS in the fetal circulation and the initiation of labor.
When plasma DHAS was quantified in cord blood and in serial samples from chronically catheterized rhesus monkey fetuses, a significant increase in plasma DHAS concentration occurred after 150 days gestational age (404 ± 37 vs. 1093 ± 159 ng/ml), and an additional increase was found after 159 days (2246 ± 712 ng/ml). A diurnal change in fetal plasma DHAS occurred in chronically catheterized fetuses, with evening samples having higher values than morning samples. Further, there was an increase in plasma DHAS concentrations in the 4–5 days after fetal surgery. A significant increase in fetal plasma DHAS concentration occurred in the newborn rhesus monkey. Although plasma DHAS concentrations remained significantly higher than in the late gestation fetus, they decreased by approximately half within the first 2 weeks of life.
A close correlation existed between fetal plasma DHAS and fetal adrenal weight in control fetuses delivered by hysterotomy and fetuses that were delivered 5 days after fetal surgery. Adrenal weights in the latter were significantly higher than those in comparably aged fetuses delivered by hysterotomy that had not undergone the stress of fetal surgery.
The possible relationship between the increase in plasma DHAS and the initiation of labor was studied by monitoring the changes in daily morning DHAS concentrations in long term catheterized fetuses and comparing these values to the mean cross-sectional DHAS values corresponding to that gestational age. In all but one case, the values of DHAS, although they increased preceding delivery, were still within the range found in fetuses of the same gestational age that were not in labor.
These data indicate that increases in DHAS are intimately related to parallel increases in fetal adrenal weight, that there are striking increases in DHAS levels near the end of gestation, that an increase in DHAS is a component of the fetal response to surgical stress, and that there is no immediately apparent, direct relationship between fetal DHAS and preterm delivery.
* This work was,supported in part by NIH Grant HD-08478.
Postdoctoral Fellow in Reproductive Endocrinology.
Present address: Division of Clinical Chemistry, Clinical Research Center, Harrow, United Kingdom.
Present address: Unite de Neuroendocrinologie, INSERM U159, Paris, France.
¶ Present address: Department of Comparative Medicine, Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC.
|| To whom all correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed.
Received February 14, 1983.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
A. D. Nguyen, C. J. Corbin, J. C. Pattison, I. M. Bird, and A. J. Conley The Developmental Increase in Adrenocortical 17,20-Lyase Activity (Biochemical Adrenarche) Is Driven Primarily by Increasing Cytochrome b5 in Neonatal Rhesus Macaques Endocrinology, April 1, 2009; 150(4): 1748 - 1756. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. D Nguyen, S. M Mapes, C J. Corbin, and A. J Conley Morphological adrenarche in rhesus macaques: development of the zona reticularis is concurrent with fetal zone regression in the early neonatal period J. Endocrinol., December 1, 2008; 199(3): 367 - 378. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Mapes, A. F. Tarantal, C. R. Parker, F. M. Moran, J. M. Bahr, L. Pyter, and A. J. Conley Adrenocortical Cytochrome b5 Expression during Fetal Development of the Rhesus Macaque Endocrinology, April 1, 2002; 143(4): 1451 - 1458. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
D. A. Giussani, J. A. Winter, S. L. Jenkins, J. D. Tame, L. M. Abrams, X.-Y. Ding, and P. W. Nathanielsz Changes in Fetal Plasma Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone during Androstenedione-Induced Labor in the Rhesus Monkey: Lack of an Effect on the Fetal Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Endocrinology, June 1, 1998; 139(6): 2803 - 2810. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
G. W. Aberdeen, J. S. Babischkin, W. A. Davies, G. J. Pepe, and E. D. Albrecht Decline in Adrenocorticotropin Receptor Messenger Ribonucleic Acid Expression in the Baboon Fetal Adrenocortical Zone in the Second Half of Pregnancy Endocrinology, April 1, 1997; 138(4): 1634 - 1641. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Endocrinology | Endocrine Reviews | J. Clin. End. & Metab. |
| Molecular Endocrinology | Recent Prog. Horm. Res. | All Endocrine Journals |